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Both Saudi-led coalition and Houthi militias target journalists in Yemen

After the Saudi-led air strike campaign launched against the Houthis in Yemen, a military spokesperson for the coalition stated that media organisations associated with the Houthi rebels and former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh are legitimate targets.

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People gather at the site of an airstrike in Sanaa April 8, 2015. A Saudi-led coalition air strike hit an office of Yemen's Houthi rebels near the pro-Houthi television channel al-Maseera in central Sanaa on Wednesday, witnesses said

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) and its affiliate, the Yemeni Journalists' Syndicate (YJS), are gravely concerned by the current escalation of violence in the country. They have urged all the parties to the conflict to immediately stop threatening and harassing journalists and media workers, accused of affiliating with rival parties and serving their interest.

The IFJ says that journalists in Yemen are facing increasing threats from several sides as the political and military situation in the country deteriorates. After the air strike campaign launched against Houthi militiamen by the Saudi led coalition - composed by Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Sudan, Egypt, US, Jordan, Morocco and Pakistan- a military spokesperson for the coalition stated last Sunday that media organisations associated with the Houthi rebels and the former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh are legitimate targets.

Media reports say the Yemen Today, a TV affiliated with Saleh received a phone call from the coalition last Sunday with warning that the TV channel and its staff were from that moment considered a military target. They had to evacuate the building for security reasons.

“The YJS condemns any action that undermines the safety of journalists and media worker, which would be a flagrant violation of media freedom and international laws,” said the IFJ Yemeni affiliate in a statement. “The YJS holds the coalition responsible for insuring the safety of media workers. This was a reckless statement and if the threat is carried out all Yemeni journalists will be united to stand up against it.”

The YJS also asked the Houthis to reconsider their decision to close down media organisations and blocking news websites, which is “an unprecedented campaign of collective punishment” against the Yemeni media.

On his part, the IFJ President Jim Boumelha asked the national journalists to unite around the YJS in this critical period.

“The IFJ fully backs its union in Yemen and urges all sides to stop harassing journalists in the country,” said Boumelha. “The measures imposed by the Houthis and the statement launched by the Saudi led coalition are both designed to crush an already narrow marging of freedom of expression and freedom of the press in Yemen. We urge all Yemeni journalists to unite around their union, which is leading fight against violence and extremism that is hitting the journalists' community”.

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